5.1 Receiving & Identification
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PN/lot/MSL/expiry,receiving verifydock packs, label uniquely, and quarantine doubts fast.
A calm production line starts atis the dock,control point where partsraw materials first meetgain thetheir factory’smanufacturing memory.identity. Here the aim is simple: everyEvery reel, tray, paste jar, and bare PCB (printedpasses circuitthrough board)this entersgateway, with its identity confirmed,where condition visible,is verified, data captured, and risks understoodscreened sobefore entering controlled storage. Done with discipline, receiving not only prevents hidden defects from slipping downstream but also establishes the traceability hasbackbone athat firmlater firstquality link.checks Adepend fewon. coreIt acronyms setis the scene:moment MSDwhen (moisture-sensitivesupplier device)packaging withbecomes itsfactory-certified MSLinventory, (moistureready sensitivityfor level), MBB (moisture barrier bag) with a HIC (humidity indicator card),predictable and astable UID (unique identifier) tied into MES/ERP (manufacturing/enterprise systems). The emphasis is on guarding moisture clocks, cold-chain materials, and revision control before anything touches a feeder or bench. Done consistently, receiving becomes a gate of evidence—turning supplier boxes into uniquely labeled, storage-ready assets that keep the build quiet and predictable.
5.1.1 Purpose & scope
Get every inbound item—from reels and trays to solder paste and bare PCBs—into the system cleanly: identity confirmed, condition checked, risks flagged, and storage-ready. This is the first link in traceability; do it right and the line runs calm.
5.1.2 The receiving rhythm (step-by-step)
- Stage safely. Use an ESD-safe bench and carts (see 5.3). Don’t cut near Moisture Barrier Bags (MBBs).
- Visual check (outer). Carton intact, no water marks, no crushed corners. If damaged, photo + quarantine (5.1.6).
- Unpack to the item level. Handle reels/trays/tubes/paste jars gently; keep anti-static wraps on.
- Label read & compare. Match PO → PN → description → revision; check quantity & unit (REEL/TRAY/TUBE/EA).
- Record the essentials into MES/ERP:
- PN (internal), supplier PN, description
- Lot/Date code (e.g., YYWW), qty, UoM
- MSL (if present), expiry (paste/flux/adhesives), finish for PCBs (e.g., ENIG/OSP)
- Supplier, COC# if provided
- Initial state = SEALED (unless bag already open)
- Integrity check (item).
- For MSDs: MBB present, seal straight, no punctures, HIC & desiccant visible (do not open here; opening lives in 5.4).
- For paste/flux: jar/cartridge intact, storage temp label readable, expiry in future.
- For PCBs: vacuum wrap intact, no corner dings, correct rev/finish.
- Assign a unique ID (UID). Print an internal 2D label (DataMatrix/QR) that ties the physical item to the MES record.
- Place labels correctly. Outer carton + immediate container (reel hub or tray corner). Never cover supplier labels, MSL triangles, or HIC windows.
- Put-away. Route by type: MSDs → dry cabinet (5.2), paste/flux → cold chain (5.5), others → ESD racking.
- Exceptions → quarantine. Anything unclear or damaged is NG-QUAR with a ticket (5.1.6).
5.1.3 What the UID label says (and where it goes)
Fields (human-readable + 2D code):
- UID (system-generated)
- PN / Description / Rev
- Lot/Date code
- Qty & UoM (e.g., 5,000 EA / REEL)
- MSL (if applicable) & Initial State = SEALED / OPEN / DRY-PACK (RESET) / QUARANTINE
- Expiry (for chemistries)
- Received date, operator, site/warehouse bin
Placement guide:
- Reels: On the hub face, edge-aligned; readable through feeder bank windows.
- Trays/Tubes: Top-right corner, not blocking cavities or latch.
- MBBs: Above the seal, never over the seam or the HIC window.
- Paste/Flux: On the sidewall, not the lid; leaves room for thaw/mix stickers (5.5).
- Cartons: One face + one adjacent face for easy scanning on the rack.
5.1.4 Data you must capture (by material type)
5.1.5 Status states (what the system should say)
- SEALED — Factory pack intact; moisture clock not started.
- OPEN — Pack opened; moisture floor life running (5.4).
- DRY-PACK (RESET) — Resealed after qualified bake; timer reset (5.4).
- QUARANTINE — Hold for review/MRB; do not issue.
- SCRAP — Not for use; dispositioned in MRB.
These states sync to labels so operators don’t guess.
5.1.6 Quarantine (what earns a red tag)
Quarantine immediately if you see: crushed cartons, torn MBBs, missing HIC/desiccant, wrong revision/finish, expired paste/flux, mixed lots in one reel, wrong quantity vs PO, or counterfeit red flags (spelling errors, odd fonts, over-stickers—see 6.5).
Action: photo → ticket → segregated shelf/bin → supplier/quality notified. Nothing leaves quarantine without MRB disposition.
5.1.7 Acceptance cues (fast table)
5.1.8 Common traps → smallest reliable fix
5.1.9 Pocket checklists
At the dock
- Carton intact? If no → photo + quarantine
- PN/rev/qty match PO; unit correct (REEL/TRAY/TUBE/EA)
- Read labels; record lot/date, MSL, expiry (if any)
- Integrity: MBB sealed with HIC + desiccant; jars intact
System & labels
- MES/ERP record complete; state = SEALED
- UID label printed and placed without covering supplier info
- Put-away location assigned (dry cabinet / fridge / ESD shelf)
Quarantine triggers
- Damage, wrong rev/finish, expired chemistries, torn MBB, missing HIC/desiccant, odd/counterfeit signs
Consistent
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